45 comments:

Its hard to argue that the song had a monumental impact on music history, so from that point of view, I can't argue with the selection, however, if it were to be judged on musical song writing merits, NOPE!

"I wish I was a baby boomer so I could wallow in all the marvelousness of what happened when I was young. Because that's when stuff was the best!"

If you look at the whole list at the link, you'll see all the decades are very well covered. The bloggers there are fond of pop music generally, even stuff from the last 10 years, which I don't know at all. And they are not Baby Boomers, btw.

And just because I like you guys, here's another bonus Liz Phair video, a cover of The Vapors' "Turning Japanese." If you knew that the title of the song was about masturbation, go to the head of the class!

Went out, bought a guitar and learned a good bit of their catalouge. Funny that in the 1960's you you would go to dances and the bands would NEVER play Beatle songs. Stones, Dave Clark 5, Animals, Herman's Hermits, etc. were all in the set lists. Never the Beatles. They were revered and their music was held sacrosanct. To this day I can still play Norweigan Wood, Michelle, and any number of other Lennon/McCartney tunes. Badly.

One of their worst songs, actually their early songs were all crap, the Beach Boys were far superior in their early music. Later, however the Beatles were magnificent and the Beach Boys lost traction after Good Vibrations.

I was only 6, but I remember singing it endlessly to myself all day long. I didn't even know who the Beatles were, but the music was contagious to kids.

People generally think of those times as being repressive compared to today, but I don't remember it that way at all. Everyone was trying new things in the culture, art, technology, relationships. People smoked, drank and and related to each other more honestly than today, I think.

For example, my small hometown was about 98% white, but my family had Black family friends that we did things with like go camping and fishing, bowling, etc. The race thing never came up. My parents would call them "our colored friends". That we were different races just seemed unimportant. Nobody ever said anything negative about them or our relationship with them. Only about 5 Black kids in the 2000 student high school class, but one was elected homecoming queen.

People wanted to make a inclusive statement, and there seemed little disagreement about it. Then again all the Blacks there were middle class and law abiding. When I moved to a liberal big city, I learned about racism. It may have just been different in small towns.

My sister married a black guy back in the sixties. This was a little contentious at first, but smoothed over pretty quickly. He turned out to be an ass, and that had a lasting effect, I think, on us. Unfairly we attached some of that to other Blacks we met afterward. We were less trusting.

That's the problem with race. If members of your group are acting badly and you have a strong group identity, then you need to fix one or the other.

Hard to argue with the impact of the song - their first #1 in the USA - but the reason the Beatles had staying power is that the songs kept getting better. She Loves You gets my vote for the quintessential early 60's pop song.

Bonus observation: It seems obvious to me that I Saw Her Standing There (US B side) was written to be "easy" for a bassist to sing while playing a pretty busy boogie bass line. Most of Paul's best bass playing is on songs by John or George.

First Ed Sullivan show. The Beatles had gone into the Control Room during rehersals and asked the engineers to keep the volume up on the instruments. That was a big no-no to go in the CBS control room and make "suggestions". As a result the CBS engineers in an apparent reprisal dropped John's vocals completely from the "I Want to Hold Your Hand" mix when they did the song live that night. You Tube it up and listen. No John.

I remember being blown away by this song when it came out. Sure, looking back the words were simple and naive, but the world wasn't so jaded as it is today; the words didn't seem so naive at the time.

The revolutionary aspect was that it was rock but it was such a different sound from the stuff that had been on the charts for quite some time before it. Someone had found a new sound and like many kids my age I was yelling, "What?? Play that again!"

I completely agree that this song was the beginning of a huge change in pop music.

The Zutons, a Liverpudlian band like the Beatles, recorded this tune at Abbey Road, the studio created by the Beatles. It wasn't known beyond Liverpool until Amy Winehouse sang it at Nelson Mandela's 90th birthday party. It didn't really become famous until Bruno Mars performed it at a memorial as a tribute to Amy Winehouse.

Shanna, by co-incidence I pulled out my Herman Hermits CD a couple of nights ago and played it through twice. Peter Noone was actually a very talented writer. And he was incredibly young when he started recording.

If you look at the whole list at the link, you'll see all the decades are very well covered.

This defense against the charge of Boomer narcissism is actually evidence in support of the charge. "All the decades" of Boomer existence are covered, but none before. The world of popular music apparently began in the mid-1950s.

Yes, this is partly b/c the Billboard Top 100 was instituted in the mid '50s, but there were other Billboard charts for quite a while before that.

The worst boomer presumption is to babble on about the grand social significance of their pop faves. You want social/historical significance? Listen to Kitty Kallen sing about her orgasms with her returning soldier in 1945's "It's Been a Long, Long Time".

Reading through those postwar Billboard charts really helps put the subsequent rock'n'roll revolution in context. The music of the late '40s and early '50s seems to have largely served to sedate people exhausted by war.

"If you look at the whole list at the link, you'll see all the decades are very well covered. The bloggers there are fond of pop music generally, even stuff from the last 10 years, which I don't know at all."PARTICULARLY THE LAST 10 YEARS.

People who thinkg the Beatles came out of nowhere or that there was "nothing" happening just before them ignore the fact that they and the other Brit invasion groups were heavily influenced by early '60s Motown,R&B and girl groups (along with the '50s influences, Presley/Berry/Holly/Everlys).